A Republican Super PAC, a "research and rapid response" organization, is accusing the Hoboken administration of Mayor Dawn Zimmer of “stonewalling" its Open Public Records Act request for communications between the mayor's office and national Democratic Party organizations, according to Real Clear Politics.

In an article written by Scott Conroy, a letter by Tim Miller of America Rising PAC was sent to the Mile Square City Clerk's office requesting “all correspondence from Jan. 7 to Jan. 31 exchanged between the mayor and her staff and groups ranging from the Democratic National Committee to Priorities USA (as well as New Jersey state legislators) . . .

“Miller also requested copies of physical and electronic communication between Zimmer’s office related to the scheduling of Zimmer's interview with MSNBC’s Steve Kornacki . . .,” who broke the news of Zimmer's allegations against the the administration of GOP Gov. Chris Christie. She said Christie was holding much-needed super storm Sandy relief funding hostage until she helped push through approvals for a multi-million dollar development in her city by the Rockefeller group.

The request was reportedly denied because, according to Real Clear Politics, it was considered vague, broad, and it would disrupt the City Clerk's office. Clerk Michael Mastropasqua orZimmer couldn't be reached for comment today.

Miller's response was quoted by Real Clear Politics: "National Democrats and liberal pundits have been running a coordinated political smear campaign against Governor Christie that has included a number of highly dubious claims with no evidence to support them ... Now, she is stonewalling attempts to identify who in the Democratic Party tried to leverage her baseless charges for political gain, rather than comply with the New Jersey Open Public Records Act."

Christie's legal team has also made OPRA requests for all correspondence between Hoboken officials and the New York Times concerning their client, Sandy relief funding, and the Rockefeller Group and its proposed development.